HP MSR933 3G JG517A 用户手册

产品代码
JG517A
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页码 44
QuickSpecs  
HP MSR93x Series 
Overview 
 
 
 
c04315114 – DA – 14559  Worldwide — Version 8 — August 18, 2014 
Page 4 
 
MD5 authentication for increased security and graceful restart for faster failure recovery 
 
Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP-4) 
delivers an implementation of the Exterior Gateway Protocol (EGP) utilizing path vectors; uses TCP for enhanced 
reliability for the route discovery process; reduces bandwidth consumption by advertising only incremental updates; 
supports extensive policies for increased flexibility; scales to very large networks 
 
Intermediate system to intermediate system (IS-IS) 
uses a path vector Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP), which is defined by the ISO organization for IS-IS routing and extended 
by IETF RFC 1195 to operate in both TCP/IP and the OSI reference model (Integrated IS-IS) 
 
Static IPv6 routing 
provides simple manually configured IPv6 routing 
 
Dual IP stack 
maintains separate stacks for IPv4 and IPv6 to ease the transition from an IPv4-only network to an IPv6-only network 
design 
 
Routing Information Protocol next generation (RIPng) 
extends RIPv2 to support IPv6 addressing 
 
OSPFv3 
provides OSPF support for IPv6 
 
BGP+ 
extends BGP-4 to support Multiprotocol BGP (MBGP), including support for IPv6 addressing 
 
IS-IS for IPv6 
extends IS-IS to support IPv6 addressing 
 
IPv6 tunneling 
allows IPv6 packets to traverse IPv4-only networks by encapsulating the IPv6 packet into a standard IPv4 packet; 
supports manually configured, 6to4, and Intra-Site Automatic Tunnel Addressing Protocol (ISATAP) tunnels; is an 
important element for the transition from IPv4 to IPv6 
 
Policy routing 
allows custom filters for increased performance and security; supports ACLs, IP prefix, AS paths, community lists, and 
aggregate policies 
 
BGP4+ support 
utilizes the BGP-4 (RFC 4271) exterior routing protocol for routing integrity and reliability between different autonomous 
systems 
Security 
 
Access control list (ACL) 
supports powerful ACLs for both IPv4 and IPv6; ACLs are used for filtering traffic to prevent unauthorized users from 
accessing the network, or for controlling network traffic to save resources; rules can either deny or permit traffic to be 
forwarded; rules can be based on a Layer 2 header or a Layer 3 protocol header; rules can be set to operate on specific 
dates or times 
 
Terminal Access Controller Access-Control System (TACACS+) 
delivers an authentication tool using TCP with encryption of the full authentication request, providing additional security 
 
Network login 
allows authentication of multiple users per port using the IEEE 802.1X standard 
 
Remote Authentication Dial-in user Service (RADIUS) login 
eases security access administration by using a password authentication server 
 
NAT enablement: 
facilitates one-to-one NAT, many-to-many NAT, and NAT control—enabling NAT-PT to support multiple connections; 
supports blacklisting in the NAT/NAT-PT; and enables a limit on the number of connections, session logs, and multiple 
instances 
 
SSHv2: 
uses external servers to securely log in to a remote device or MSRs from a remote location; protects against IP spoofing 
and plain-text password interception, with authentication and encryption; and increases the security of SFTP transfers 
 
Unicast Reverse Path Forwarding (URPF): 
allows normal packets to be forwarded correctly, but discards the attaching packets due to lack of a reverse path route or